Would you buy a hybrid TVR?

Would you buy a hybrid TVR?

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Discussion

V8 GMS

Original Poster:

727 posts

215 months

Tuesday 3rd March 2015
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Considering that koenigsegg have unveiled this 'game changer' Wow at Geneva, do you think this is a direction TVR could/should go in the future?
(Albeit still living up to the TVR ethos of offering supercar rivaling performance on a more realistic budget?)

Milky400

1,960 posts

178 months

Wednesday 4th March 2015
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Holy mother of Jesus............

Jurgen Schmidt

824 posts

201 months

Wednesday 4th March 2015
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Took the words out of my mouth...spin

wongthecorrupter

2,409 posts

171 months

Wednesday 4th March 2015
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wtf ffs, no I would not,lets hope they never make one

phillpot

17,114 posts

183 months

Wednesday 4th March 2015
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TVR's history with electrics? you havin' a laugh biggrin

gordonsalive

446 posts

187 months

Wednesday 4th March 2015
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roflroflrofl

A900ss

3,248 posts

152 months

Wednesday 4th March 2015
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Absolutely.

Provided it was a hybrid for incremental performance rather than eco credentials.

Roy C

4,187 posts

284 months

Wednesday 4th March 2015
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I think this is more of a TVR-style hybrid. biggrin




V8 GMS

Original Poster:

727 posts

215 months

Wednesday 4th March 2015
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A900ss said:
Absolutely.

Provided it was a hybrid for incremental performance rather than eco credentials.
I agree with this. ^^^
If TVR still want to be regarded as being 'a little bit mad' in 10 years time - then it'll need to embrace this technology (before all the hot-hatches do).


350Matt

3,736 posts

279 months

Wednesday 4th March 2015
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agreed, its definitely the right thing to do

not only that most major cities are going zero emission zones so if you want to drive through London in 10 years time you'll need an electric motor of some sort

peteA

2,681 posts

234 months

Wednesday 4th March 2015
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I would...I think...

As stated if its for increasing performance...why not? La Ferrari...?

My daily is BMW Active Hybrid 3...company car...low emissions (139 I think?) so BIK is low meaning I paid the same co car tax for this as I did for my previous Merc diesel.

Car has a petrol 3 litre straight six (good TVR links so far) and is turbocharged...over 300Bhp. There are batteries in the boot and an electric motor bolted on the end of the engine. I cant remember the exact figures but I'm sure the electric motor is rated at approx 50Bhp (or the equivalent). In sport mode they work together - 0-60mph is 5.1 Sec's and top speed limited to 155mph...in a relatively heavy 3 series.

Only problem is its Auto only - not a problem in a daily (its the ZF 8 speed unit) but maybe not so good in a sports car?...flappy paddles maybe?

I've often wondered what this power plant would be like in a lighter TVR and with a fruitier exhaust note?

bluezeeland

1,965 posts

159 months

Wednesday 4th March 2015
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Most major car manufacturers (i.e. Ford, Volvo, VW) are looking at the change of our mobility, that is, there will be a 'need' (to get you somewhere) and a 'want' (go for a drive....) The latter is where the sportscar comes in, obviously.

What the form of this will be, what engine, hybrid, other mixes, I do not know (they probably do and how to make a profit out of it)

Little side-note; after having 'electrified' a Lotus and a Jaguar of sorts, Tesla are now looking for a continuation of their line............so is TVR........idea

taking shelter now !

Jurgen Schmidt

824 posts

201 months

Wednesday 4th March 2015
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I guess if it were nuclear powered...rear wheel drive of course

900T-R

20,404 posts

257 months

Wednesday 4th March 2015
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I'd be very much in favour of a flywheel hybrid rather than 'leccy... less weight to carry about, more efficient than battery-electric hybrids and would still fit the brief of TVRs being a 'mechanical' car rather than a computer on wheels. smile

jamieduff1981

8,024 posts

140 months

Wednesday 4th March 2015
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Probably not.

That Konnigshoweveryouspellit and pretty much all the other current supercars don't interest me at all. They're far too fast. It's frustrating having circa 400bhp in a TVR given how rarely you can put your foot down without rocketting into prison sentence speeds in mid-high gears or just spinning into the scenery in low gears. That's the good part.

The bad part is when the car has lots of power and doesn't demand a high level of skill. They just accelerate like an aircraft carrier steam catapult launch which is fun for about 3 goes and then the car is criminally boring to drive unless you want to drive down British dual carriageways at over 180mph - for which I'd have you shot in the head at the side of the road in Jamie's Britain - which would be non-fatal because nobody with 2 brain cells to keep one another company would actually do on a public road with other people who haven't signed up to your fun and games.

These sorts of cars sound great until you actually try one. Drive a modern Ferrari even within speeds which "only" attract an SP30 conviction and I challenge you to find anything remotely engaging about the experience other than admiring your reflection in high street shop windows.